Your Career Is Just One Long Conversation With Your Audience
The difference between an audience and a community is just which way the chairs are facing…
Good Humans, Technology & Climate Change
The difference between an audience and a community is just which way the chairs are facing…
Excellent FREE magazine from Reuters on tomorrows capitalism, sustainability, climate action and transformation.
Carbon is the element that likes to hold hands and collaborate. Carbon is fascinating when you look at where it goes. It will go to a party and if it’s a good party it will stay and if it’s not it will leave and go to another party…
You are scrolling through the news and see yet another story about climate change. Australia is on fire. Indonesia is drowning. At the same time, Donald Trump is trying to make it … Continue reading How To Stop Freaking Out & Do Something About Global Warming
Quorn is to become the first major brand to introduce carbon labelling on its products. The new labels, aimed at helping consumers understand the environmental impact of their shopping, will start … Continue reading Quorn to become first major brand to introduce carbon labelling
This great Harvard Business paper, list of people to follow in 2020 and this great post a playing a big part in a few things I’m currently working on…
2020 will be a year of action. I’m looking forward to it being a year of doing things and not just talking about things. Sustainability will be the word of the year.
Great things can happen in 100 days when you put your mind to it.
The Bank of England wants to quantify the risk that climate change poses to the financial system. This could result in banks and insurers having to hold more capital which will have profound effects on the way the economy is funded.
A look behind the scenes at the trends, insights, demographics and keywords behind the people who are driving the climate change narrative.
“I don’t write things down to remember them later, I write things down to remember them now”.
Even the rather primitive climate computer models of the 1970s, 80s and 90s were impressively accurate, lending extra credibility to the much more advanced climate models of today. That’s the conclusion of a paper released Wednesday in Geophysical Research Letters, a peer-reviewed science journal.